ittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Martin

61 N.E. 229, 157 Ind. 216, 1901 Ind. LEXIS 149
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1901
DocketNo. 19,148
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 61 N.E. 229 (ittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Martin, 61 N.E. 229, 157 Ind. 216, 1901 Ind. LEXIS 149 (Ind. 1901).

Opinion

Baker, J.

Appellee recovered a judgment against appellant for $7,250 for wrongfully causing the death of her intestate. Appellant assigns that the court erred in overruling its motion to require each paragraph of complaint to be made more specific, its demurrers to the first and second paragraphs of complaint, and its motion for a new trial.

The motion to make more specific is not' in the record. The clerk has copied the motion into the transcript as a part of the proceedings of the day on which the motion was filed. After the motion was overruled, time was given in which to file a bill of exceptions. The bill, as copied by the clerk, does not contain the motion, but refers to the place in the transcript where it had been previously copied. Eo order of court was made that the motion should be a part of the record without a bill of exceptions. The act of the clerk in copying the motion into the transcript, outside of the bill and without order of court, was unwarranted under §662 Bums 1901, §650 R. S. 1881 and Horner 18*97. Only those matters that are already properly in the transcript as a part of the record may be brought into the transcript of a bill of exceptions by reference. Gussman v. Gussman, 140 Ind. 433.

[219]*219In support of the demurrers, appellant contends that appellee’s averments do not affirmatively show that the decedent was free from fault. In the first paragraph the accident is described substantially as follows: That, from Washington street to Massachusetts avenue, in Indianapolis, Indiana, appellant, the Big Four, the Lake Erie and Western, and the Monon companies used a line of railway tracks in common; that on August 7, 1897, and long prior thereto', decedent was employed by the Monon company as a locomotive engineer; that on that day decedent, in performance of his duties to his employer, had his engine upon the common tracks, and thereupon appellant wrongfully, carelessly and negligently ran one of its engines against decedent’s engine and killed him without any fault on his part. The second paragraph comprised substantially the same and the following additional averments: That it was the rule and custom of all the companies, as appellant knew, that engines and cars should be run over the common tracks at a reasonable speed and under full control of the engineers so that a stop could be made at any time within a very short distance; that appellant violated the rule, and ran an engine at an unreasonable and dangerous speed, without its being under full control of the engineer, wrongfully and negligently against decedent’s engine and killed him without any fault on his part. Each paragraph contains the general averment that decedent was free from contributory negligence, . This is sufficient unless specific averments prove the general allegation to be false. It appears that decedent was in a place where he had a right to be, was in the line of his employment, and was killed, while there, in a collision with respect to which appellant was negligent. What decedent did, or what, having the opportunity, he failed to do, is not specifically alleged. The demurrers were therefore properly overruled. Stewart v. Pennsylvania Co., 130 Ind. 242; Citizens St. R. Co. v. Sutton, 148 Ind. 169.

Appellant contends that the evidence fails to establish de[220]*220cedent’s freedom from contributory negligence. Tbe evidence is conflicting at some points, but the jury were warranted in taking the facts to be these: Extending southerly from Massachusetts avenue to Washington street were two main tracks, used in common by appellant, the Big Eour, the Lake Erie and Western, and the Monon companies. One track was owned by the Big Eour and the other by the Lake Erie and Western. All south-bound engines and trains used the east track; north-bound, the west track. Near Massachusetts avenue was a switch, through which southbound trains had to pass in order to enter upon this common track. Near Washington street was a switch, through which south-bound trains had to pass from this comm on track in order to enter upon the tracks of the Union railway company, a corporation that owned the Union station and a belt line connecting together all the railroads of Indianapolis. Near this last named switch was another, leading to the Monon freight yard. The Massachusetts avenue switch was in charge of a switch-tender employed by the Big Eour. The Washington street switch was in charge of a switch-tender employed by the Union company. The distance between these switches was a little over a mile. No switch intervened. About 600 feet north of Washington street and parallel therewith was Market street, from which the common tracks curved somewhat to the east. The four companies heretofore named used the common tracks for their passenger ánd freight trains. More than thirty passenger trains passed daily over these tracks. The switch engines of all companies in the city used these tracks in the handling and interchange of freight cars. The trainmen were not permitted to throw the switches, but the tenders in charge governed the admission or exclusion of trains and engines. No printed rules of any of the companies, or of the companies jointly, applied to the operation of trains and engines upon the common tracks; but, by usage, the following rules had become established: While on these tracks [221]*221all engines and trains had equal rights; all south-hound ran on the east track, all north-bound on the west; each engine or train was to be run under full control and with a sharp lookout so as to avoid running into any engine or train ahead of it; no flagging or other warning to the rear was required or used; as no north-bound engines were admitted on the east track, and vice versa, the safety of all was to be maintained by each avoiding injury to- those ahead; if an incoming passenger train from the north was ten or more minutes late, switch-engines with cars were admitted on the east or south-hound track; if a switch engine, moving south, had a car or cars in front destined for the Monon yard, the crew had the right to put the car in the yard, move northward sufficiently to clear the switch, and continue south; and if a passenger train followed, it was to be under full control, and its crew were to look out for the switch engine and cars ahead of it, to come to a full stop if necessary, and to whistle as a signal that they wanted the track, and thereupon the switching crew were to get off of the common track and out of the way as soon as practicable. An ordinance forbade the running of engines and trains anywhere in the city at a higher speed than four miles an hour. About 3 o’clock in the morning of August 7,1897, a Monon switching crew came from the north to the Massachusetts avenue switch leading to the south-hound common track. The crew comprised the conductor, two brakemen, the fireman, and decedent as the engineer. The conductor had charge of his train and authority to direct the other members of the crew. Appellant’s south-bound passenger train, according to schedule, was due in two or three minutes; but it was fifteen minutes late and was so reported. The switch-tender gave the track to the Monon conductor. The engine was at the north or rear end of a train of twenty freight cars, the southernmost one of which was destined to the Monon yard. The conductor was on this car, one brakeman was at the center of the train, the other brakeman was on the car next to the [222]*222engine, and the fireman and decedent were in the cah of the engine. Rear Washington street the conductor gave the switch-tender a signal to open the switch leading into the Monon yard.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 N.E. 229, 157 Ind. 216, 1901 Ind. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ittsburgh-cincinnati-chicago-st-louis-railway-co-v-martin-ind-1901.